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Apr 29, 2013
04/13
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KGO
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. >> tory johnson. >> it's a hint. >> the major kitchen-palooza event. serious money-saving madness for you. you have to stick around for the details. >> oh! >> pancake down! >> as i understand this, it all leads up to the biggest deal we have ever revealed that you have ever helped us give away at the end of the week? >> i can't tell you. i can't tell you. my lips are sealed. >> i think we're beyond the five-second rule. thank you. >> thank you. >> let me guess, that's beginning right there. how about an incredible new eye treatment that in ten minutes could get rid of dark circles. how about if we eliminate the word "puffiness" from the english language. >>> take a look at this. what are the hula hoopers doing. kelly osbourne has been using them to lose weight. >> that is not easy. >>> first the news from josh. >>> more on the huge explosion overnight in europe. police say it was a natural gas explosion that collapsed part of the building near the city center near prague's national theater. at least 60 people are injured in the blast. there are fears m
. >> tory johnson. >> it's a hint. >> the major kitchen-palooza event. serious money-saving madness for you. you have to stick around for the details. >> oh! >> pancake down! >> as i understand this, it all leads up to the biggest deal we have ever revealed that you have ever helped us give away at the end of the week? >> i can't tell you. i can't tell you. my lips are sealed. >> i think we're beyond the five-second rule. thank you. >> thank...
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Apr 9, 2013
04/13
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MSNBCW
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the tenth victim was a bus driver named conrad johnson. his mother was a very brave woman who never lobbied before. we persuaded her to come because we were trying to get an assault weapons ban pushed. on numerous occasions she had to give up a day's work, give up her pay and come to sit in the legislative committee room waiting to testify. the chairman of the committee kept her waiting. he was a democrat. he kept her waiting for six hours one day until, you know, it was like 8:00 in the evening for her to testify. which i thought was the height of incivility and insensitivity and rutdness. i told him so. and the assault weapons ban back in 2003 failed in the legislature. it didn't get out of committee, it was one vote short so i'm really pleased to know that it actually passed this time around many years later. i have been testifying before. i lost my brother in 1997. he was murdered in oklahoma when he was shot in the head in his business one morning. i've used that story to try to bring home, you know, the personal nature of gun violenc
the tenth victim was a bus driver named conrad johnson. his mother was a very brave woman who never lobbied before. we persuaded her to come because we were trying to get an assault weapons ban pushed. on numerous occasions she had to give up a day's work, give up her pay and come to sit in the legislative committee room waiting to testify. the chairman of the committee kept her waiting. he was a democrat. he kept her waiting for six hours one day until, you know, it was like 8:00 in the...
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Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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johnson & johnson has a whole team, as does amgen, of lobbyists who go around, and they're very effective that way. whereas, you know, here we are, the average taxpayer doesn't have that large a voice if you listen to many people whose loved ones have died from this drug. >> host: you fly to washington, what happens? >> guest: i fly to washington, and i walk in, there's packed room at the fda meeting. and i listen as people who have loved, you know, lost their loved ones testify about this drug and how they had no idea that they should have signed consent forms to allow their loved ones to be injected with this drug. they had no idea that they were getting the high dose and not the fda-approved dose. the stories were astonishing. and there was one woman in particular that i met who lost her high school sweetheart, jim lennox, and he died in the most horrific way which was blood streaming out of his mouth, his nose, his ears, gasping for breath -- >> host: on the family couch. >> guest: on the family couch. he had almost beat cancer, but instead he died from the very thing that was suppose
johnson & johnson has a whole team, as does amgen, of lobbyists who go around, and they're very effective that way. whereas, you know, here we are, the average taxpayer doesn't have that large a voice if you listen to many people whose loved ones have died from this drug. >> host: you fly to washington, what happens? >> guest: i fly to washington, and i walk in, there's packed room at the fda meeting. and i listen as people who have loved, you know, lost their loved ones testify...
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Apr 27, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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now, in the medical care system, the statistics coming from johnson & johnson was one of the providers of the medical carry that prevented medicine over a period of two or throw years, pays off to 300 to a thousand percent, and a deceiving three million to ten million. in three years time but we don't do that. there's a massive market failure going on... >> think out of the box on this one. the irish have -- the irish prime minister has announced -- if you want to know, that ireland cannot afford its medical care system anymore. of course, they are in crisis, but they have actually have to do something else. what are we talking about? creating a wellness system. we with change behavior patterns by giving the reward, okay, or what you talked about, a series of behaviors that you win something, and with that, you have to get it, that might be starting with kids, 50,000, they want to help you think, but losing whaight, whatever, you get points,and thets can buy you more preventative medical care. preventive stuff. people who provide their medical preventative care can go, just like in the
now, in the medical care system, the statistics coming from johnson & johnson was one of the providers of the medical carry that prevented medicine over a period of two or throw years, pays off to 300 to a thousand percent, and a deceiving three million to ten million. in three years time but we don't do that. there's a massive market failure going on... >> think out of the box on this one. the irish have -- the irish prime minister has announced -- if you want to know, that ireland...
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Apr 29, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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as far as jack johnson was concerned, frederick had an influence on his life subject johnson is the first black heavyweight champion of the world. he defeated a series of racist boxers who refused to fight him for the racial reasons. but racism is very widespread in the north. he had a cafe in downtown chicago, and he also liked white girlfriends. the white authorities in chicago try to use the mann act against him, which is actually designed to prevent the movement of women across state lines and they try to hook the have one of a series of girlfriends and i was able to deduce from the records that i found in various places and newspaper articles that when jack johnson was being hounded in chicago, the news of the fact spread through the united states into the european newspapers frederick thomas reached out to him in a day after that happened and offered him tickets to come and put on exhibition fights in moscow and an advance against very generous prize money that he expected he would actually win. and jack johnson did go to europe although he didn't go straight to moscow. he spent mor
as far as jack johnson was concerned, frederick had an influence on his life subject johnson is the first black heavyweight champion of the world. he defeated a series of racist boxers who refused to fight him for the racial reasons. but racism is very widespread in the north. he had a cafe in downtown chicago, and he also liked white girlfriends. the white authorities in chicago try to use the mann act against him, which is actually designed to prevent the movement of women across state lines...
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Apr 28, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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assistance the assistance i do for some people, i was able to read this book and her editor, sherry johnson was absolutely amazing. changing my spare spirit never thought i'd do a book, but my cousin, god rest his soul, francis wallace always told the republicans, equaling the freeze the gipper. ronald reagan, that was his successful movie. but my cousin always told me, you need to write a book. i just never thought i'd rate this one i read it this way. so i put a lot of thought into it. didn't do the book affairs. i outlined that in here. then i did 60 minutes of my former chief of staff and neil and i agreed to the 60 minutes together. this ever going to have jack abramoff on 60 minutes and neil and india. it is better to have the two of us. it shows more of an honesty fact your if i see this coming could say no, bob, or vice versa. in my opinion, the two side-by-side with the battery to do that. i went to india for a one-month trip and saw 60 minutes over there. when i saw it i watched jack abramoff. jack did not do this to me. i did this myself. i made those decisions. i watched jack ab
assistance the assistance i do for some people, i was able to read this book and her editor, sherry johnson was absolutely amazing. changing my spare spirit never thought i'd do a book, but my cousin, god rest his soul, francis wallace always told the republicans, equaling the freeze the gipper. ronald reagan, that was his successful movie. but my cousin always told me, you need to write a book. i just never thought i'd rate this one i read it this way. so i put a lot of thought into it. didn't...
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Apr 7, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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now, in the medical care system, these are statistics coming from johnson & johnson who is one of the providers and preventive medicine over a period of two to three years works out to 2000%. [inaudible] this is a massive market failure going on and in the extreme case of the united states -- so what is really happening is that financial incentives and the medical care system are two things. you need to be sick and alive. if you are not alive you are not -- and if you are not sick you you are not interested in that explains this. .. you have behavior and that you get your dream. we're starting with king, 50,000 kids that are going to be part of the process this year. the mechanism is it going to do healthy things, spores, losing weight, whatever. you get points in these planes can buy you more preventive medical care and the people who are providing the care can go. they would be cashing in for dollars. if you lose 20 pounds, the probability of a heart attack or diabetes has dropped significantly. well, that issue is a difficult margin that we know seminary scratcher corporation and l
now, in the medical care system, these are statistics coming from johnson & johnson who is one of the providers and preventive medicine over a period of two to three years works out to 2000%. [inaudible] this is a massive market failure going on and in the extreme case of the united states -- so what is really happening is that financial incentives and the medical care system are two things. you need to be sick and alive. if you are not alive you are not -- and if you are not sick you you...
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Apr 7, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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lyndon johnson used forceful hands-on leadership that produced historic civil rights legislation and a 25% across-the-board income tax cut in just six weeks after the assassination of president kennedy. he cajoled, he hugged, he begged, he threatened, he praised, he did what a hands-on leader does, and his hands were huge. and the stories about johnson grabbing people by the shoulder and just getting right in their, right in their grill to make them realize how important it was to get things done was a sign of leadership that we need today. he led. or how about my dad and the managing of the fall of the iron curtain? as the soviet empire was collapsing, there were significant dangers that there would be violence of epic proportions. the united states could have justifiably done a victory dance over the soviets, particularly, for example, when the berlin wall fell. i'll never forget watching my dad on tv and critics, the pundits were all saying, well, he should go over there and celebrate with the german people. had my dad done what the people of the here and now wanted him to do rath
lyndon johnson used forceful hands-on leadership that produced historic civil rights legislation and a 25% across-the-board income tax cut in just six weeks after the assassination of president kennedy. he cajoled, he hugged, he begged, he threatened, he praised, he did what a hands-on leader does, and his hands were huge. and the stories about johnson grabbing people by the shoulder and just getting right in their, right in their grill to make them realize how important it was to get things...
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Apr 14, 2013
04/13
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KPIX
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captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org >> osgood: i'm charles osgood. please join us again next sunday morning. until then, i'll see you on the radio. ,,,,,,,, about the teens arrested f f0 assault of audrie pott. >>> bay area teenager's suicide is now fueling debate over cyber bulling. new details over the teens arrested for the suicide of aubrey potts. >>> there's changes ahead big time. the forecast in minutes. >> don't suggest it's a roadblock. you are entitled to stay in place if the voters want you and you are performing extremely well. >> rising political stars rally, and democrats have a closer look at what may be a generational gap in the party. >> it's 7:30. and i'm anne makovec.
captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, captioning made possible by johnson & johnson, where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org >> osgood: i'm charles osgood. please join us again next sunday morning. until then, i'll see you on the radio. ,,,,,,,, about the teens arrested f f0 assault of audrie pott. >>> bay area teenager's suicide is now fueling debate over cyber...
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Apr 9, 2013
04/13
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KPIX
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down 10.5% after news the board fired ron johnson. he had just been on the job for 16 months. the dow is up 16. the nasdaq is 1. the s&p up 1. >>> let's bring you up to date on some of the other top stories we're following for you right now -- more than 200 students at deer valley high school in antioch will be tested this thursday for tuberculosis. contra costa county health officials may test those students who may have come in contact with a classmate who once had tuberculosis but has recovered. >>> an investigation goes on in fairfield into this -- an early- morning garage fire. this started about 4:30 on marigold drive. some of the nearby homes were evacuated as a precaution but luckily no one was hurt. >>> we just got a press reless from the blue navy saying the blue angels are canceling all performances this year. that would mean no blue angels at fleet week in san francisco in october. the navy says due to budget realities, outreach events can only be supported by local assets at no cost to the government. we've put in a call to san francisco city hall and are waiting
down 10.5% after news the board fired ron johnson. he had just been on the job for 16 months. the dow is up 16. the nasdaq is 1. the s&p up 1. >>> let's bring you up to date on some of the other top stories we're following for you right now -- more than 200 students at deer valley high school in antioch will be tested this thursday for tuberculosis. contra costa county health officials may test those students who may have come in contact with a classmate who once had tuberculosis...
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Apr 9, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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johnson said, nothing concentrates the mind like that prospect of hanging. and today the senior leaders of our naval services really need the help of clear thinking and dialogue, and this forum is unique. as i look about today and i saw earlier the quality of the people that we have attending from industry, from the public at large, and from the services, there has never been a more important opportunity to take advantage of the three days a you have here to really think through and debate the best approaches to carry out what the navy league was established to do, which is to communicate to the american people the importance of the sea services and what we can do to help carry that message and get through this time of crisis to see that we are not permanently set on a different course than this country's great destiny. today we're going to do is have each of our panelists to let chief of naval operations speak first. the commandant of the marine corps, the vice commandant of the coast guard will he speak in turn, and then we will have questions, first from
johnson said, nothing concentrates the mind like that prospect of hanging. and today the senior leaders of our naval services really need the help of clear thinking and dialogue, and this forum is unique. as i look about today and i saw earlier the quality of the people that we have attending from industry, from the public at large, and from the services, there has never been a more important opportunity to take advantage of the three days a you have here to really think through and debate the...
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Apr 12, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN
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johnson is recognized. chairman.ou, mr. mr. secretary, i realize your time constraints, so some of these questions i would like you to answer yes or no. with respect to securing social security's future, in his book, athe predictable surprise," retirement expert said if we fail to act, we threaten the prosperity of younger generations. that is a prospect your former boss president clinton said would be horribly wrong and unfair. i appreciated that comment that was 15 years ago. i said i was encouraged that the president's budget took a first step towards protecting social security for today's workers by including the chained consumer price index to copulate the annual cost-of- living adjustment. do you think this is a more accurate way of measuring inflation? my openingicated in comments, congressman, it is something we are prepared to do as part of the balance is reduction package. technically, it can be justified. but it does have an impact in terms of affecting benefits long-term. fromhear a lot of talk aarp and others that
johnson is recognized. chairman.ou, mr. mr. secretary, i realize your time constraints, so some of these questions i would like you to answer yes or no. with respect to securing social security's future, in his book, athe predictable surprise," retirement expert said if we fail to act, we threaten the prosperity of younger generations. that is a prospect your former boss president clinton said would be horribly wrong and unfair. i appreciated that comment that was 15 years ago. i said i...
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Apr 18, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN
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. >> in order of arrivals, questions next will be senator johnson. >> thank you, mr. chairman. you were talk agent surpluses. you were talking about the revenue side of the equation. one reason we had a budget surplus was that government spending was a little over 18%. we are over 22% now and we're on a trajectory to hit 35%. it was the level of spending from my standpoint to that balances budgets. i want to get that on the record. thank you for appearing here and thanks for you service. i don't envy your task. you have a big job and we're all rooting for you. i want to pick up on the consolidation of the grant programs. can you speak to me the type of pressure you feel. do you find it is a real problem? >> senator, i try -- i do not involve myself in the direct grant decisions. so that pressure gets a little diminished. but the real problem is these grants, many came out of the 9/11 act were written at an earlier stage of our early understanding of homeland security and the capacity we had around the country. our understanding and capacity is different 10 years later and it is
. >> in order of arrivals, questions next will be senator johnson. >> thank you, mr. chairman. you were talk agent surpluses. you were talking about the revenue side of the equation. one reason we had a budget surplus was that government spending was a little over 18%. we are over 22% now and we're on a trajectory to hit 35%. it was the level of spending from my standpoint to that balances budgets. i want to get that on the record. thank you for appearing here and thanks for you...
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Apr 5, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN
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johnson, and i said, i have 500 veterans. how can we do this better? and a part-time psychiatrist because so many of my veterans had been in care at evaluated each one for care. i have my own clinic. isryone of my veterans enrolled in a v.a. health care. i do not want them to stay with me forever. i want them to have that when they leave. that is how it started out. they had a huge backlog. they had 20 people waiting for a replacement. you called and said, do have empty beds? i said, i will take them until you can find a place. i think the individual doing the talking -- it is the care givers. it is the hands-on people that makes things happen. also, i thinkess va has toe dthing come to the realization that states bring something to the table. you cannot do it alone, and you should not do it alone. i have a veteran they could not place. she served two tours in iraq and one in afghanistan. she has four children. they could not find a place for her. who would not want to help? we've bent the rules, but in the end she had a place to get her act together s
johnson, and i said, i have 500 veterans. how can we do this better? and a part-time psychiatrist because so many of my veterans had been in care at evaluated each one for care. i have my own clinic. isryone of my veterans enrolled in a v.a. health care. i do not want them to stay with me forever. i want them to have that when they leave. that is how it started out. they had a huge backlog. they had 20 people waiting for a replacement. you called and said, do have empty beds? i said, i will...
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Apr 5, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN
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my first director was a guy named roger johnson. we work well because this dovetailing of not duplicating services is not a was happening before i came. going through the university hospital for all of their care. came up to bent renegotiated, i asked john dempsey, and to you take military history. he said, we don't think that military experience is anything to do this. i called dr. johnson and i said, i have 500 veterans here, how can we work together? mee paid at the va to find with a key clinical nurse specialist and a part-time psychologist because summoning of marseille the veterans had been at care at dempsey. then we evaluated each and everyone of them. i have my own clinic and physicians. this is for every single one of my veterans that are in a residential program. i don't want them to stay with me forever, i want them to have that when i leave. with the homework, and one time i was mentioning that they had a huge backlog at the be a parent of they had 20 people waiting for nursing home placements. the heart of the matter i
my first director was a guy named roger johnson. we work well because this dovetailing of not duplicating services is not a was happening before i came. going through the university hospital for all of their care. came up to bent renegotiated, i asked john dempsey, and to you take military history. he said, we don't think that military experience is anything to do this. i called dr. johnson and i said, i have 500 veterans here, how can we work together? mee paid at the va to find with a key...
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it was at 40, now 15, ron johnson came and and started treated it like apple, it is not an apple, they are flocking to walmart, and targets and rest of other places, and you are in t soup. neil: well, clearly. and whether there is horse in there or not same soup, thank you. >> what happens when you give half a million dollars to a couple of college kids? maybe you discover the next mark zuckerberg, the guy who is putting his money whethe where s hunch is. >> get out! get out! >> that is great. with the spark cash card from capital one... boris earns unlimited rewards for his small business. can i get the smith contract, ease? thank you. that's three new paper shredders. [ boris ] put 'em on my spark card. [ garth ] boris' small business earns 2% cash back on every pchase every day. great businesses deserve unlimited rewards. read back the chicken's testimony, please. "buk, buk, bukka!" [ male announcer ] get the spark business card from capital one and earn unlimited rewards. choose 2% cash back or double miles on every purchase every day. told you i'd get half. what's in your walle ne
it was at 40, now 15, ron johnson came and and started treated it like apple, it is not an apple, they are flocking to walmart, and targets and rest of other places, and you are in t soup. neil: well, clearly. and whether there is horse in there or not same soup, thank you. >> what happens when you give half a million dollars to a couple of college kids? maybe you discover the next mark zuckerberg, the guy who is putting his money whethe where s hunch is. >> get out! get out!...
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it was at 40, now 15, ron johnson came and and started treated it like apple, it is not an apple, they are flocking to walmart, and targets and rest of other places, and you are in the soup. neil: well, clearly. and whether there is horse in there or not same soup, thank you. >> what happens when you give half a million dollars to a couple of college kids? maybe you discover the next mark zuckerberg, the guy who is putting his money whethe where s hunch is. >> get out! get out! >> that is great. this is going to be a great ye year. rify and lock. command is locked. five seconds. three, two, one. standing by for capture. the most innovative software on the planet... dragon is captured. is connecting today's leading companies to places beyond it. siemens. answers. neil: who needs a boardroom when you have a dorm room? mark zuckerberg's facebook got cooked up in his dorm room, and that 17-year-old who got millions from yahoo!, he did that in college. venture capitalist is giving a couple college kids a half million to do what they want with it, he is going to explain that. it is not that
it was at 40, now 15, ron johnson came and and started treated it like apple, it is not an apple, they are flocking to walmart, and targets and rest of other places, and you are in the soup. neil: well, clearly. and whether there is horse in there or not same soup, thank you. >> what happens when you give half a million dollars to a couple of college kids? maybe you discover the next mark zuckerberg, the guy who is putting his money whethe where s hunch is. >> get out! get out!...
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Apr 18, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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i wonder if ron johnson wants a job. let's take a look at ibm. big dow component and has been facing more and more competition in its space lately. analyst estimates call for $3.05 here. that is for eps. that is up about nearly 10% from a year ago. revenue expected to come in around $24.7 billion. a little change from last year. this has, however, beat every quarter for the past four quarters. as for the stock, well, it hasn't been that different from the broader market. rising, as we can see, year-to-date, 8.5% year-to-date. so, you know, as i say, not that different from what the broader market has been doing. we are watching after the bell for those three. back to you guys. >> yes, we are. thank you, mandy. see you later. heading toward the close, 15 minutes left. look at this, down just 68 points. what do you think? can we go neutral here at the close? >> maybe, we'll see. that's why you've got to stay all the way to the end of the show and watch. >> you're supposed to make the prediction here. >> yes, yes. major arverages are on track fo the
i wonder if ron johnson wants a job. let's take a look at ibm. big dow component and has been facing more and more competition in its space lately. analyst estimates call for $3.05 here. that is for eps. that is up about nearly 10% from a year ago. revenue expected to come in around $24.7 billion. a little change from last year. this has, however, beat every quarter for the past four quarters. as for the stock, well, it hasn't been that different from the broader market. rising, as we can see,...
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Apr 26, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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unfortunately, ron johnson tried to do too much in too short a time period. >> this is a classic, specific stock company story. >> right. >> we're not really talking about the overall environment and the consumer part of this. this is a specific misstep. >> this is what they call alpha, one way or the other. >> thanks, darrell. >> kate, thanks. >> heading towards the close, 30 minutes left in the trading session here, up 29 points. finishing off a positive week for the dow, but it's the only positive indicator right now. the s&p and nasdaq still lower. >> and up next, there are some very big companies that just refuse to pay dividends and they may be should be paying dividends given their cash balance. >>> and also, the burger battles will heating up again. burger king's earnings more doubled in the first quarter. find out if bk can dethrone mcdonald's as the king of the burger stock world. that when we come back on "closing bell." in today's markets, a lot can happen in a second. with fidelity's guaranteed one-second trade execution, we route your order to up to 75 market centers to look
unfortunately, ron johnson tried to do too much in too short a time period. >> this is a classic, specific stock company story. >> right. >> we're not really talking about the overall environment and the consumer part of this. this is a specific misstep. >> this is what they call alpha, one way or the other. >> thanks, darrell. >> kate, thanks. >> heading towards the close, 30 minutes left in the trading session here, up 29 points. finishing off a...
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Apr 5, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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pfizer, abbott, johnson, that's 16, 17, 18% up this year. they can still run. you want to go health care and you want to go industrials. these are these u.s. global gorillas. you want to get exposure to the growth inside the united states and outside -- >> even though manufacturing jobs declined in this country in march, surprisingly? >> bill, why have the prop market doubled? profits have doubled. why have they doubled? interest rates have been low, labor costs have been low, and the dollar's been low. we think we may be entering a multi-year period of dollar strength, so you want to take that into account. mexico and japan are doing structural reform. it's going to motivate the united states. mark my words, the united states is going to copy them, if even mexico, since 1927, they've had oil nationalized. they're going to let farmers in there. and if even japan, which has been a nightmare for 23 years, can change things, the united states is going to do things and we're going to blow them away. >> and mexico's an enormous story, i agree with you. a lot of mone
pfizer, abbott, johnson, that's 16, 17, 18% up this year. they can still run. you want to go health care and you want to go industrials. these are these u.s. global gorillas. you want to get exposure to the growth inside the united states and outside -- >> even though manufacturing jobs declined in this country in march, surprisingly? >> bill, why have the prop market doubled? profits have doubled. why have they doubled? interest rates have been low, labor costs have been low, and...
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Apr 9, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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it just takes time. >> seems time ran out for jcpenney ceo ron johnson. is the clock now ticking for the company's board? that's next. >> also, the banks have been leading this historic rally, as you know, but jeff cox says the banks could be heading for rough times and what could that do to the overall market? we'll talk about it, coming up on the "closing bell." tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 when i'm trading, i'm totally focused. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and the streetsmart edge trading platform from charles schwab... tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 gives me tools that help me find opportunities more easily. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 i can even access it from the cloud and trade on any computer. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and with schwab mobile, tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 i can focus on trading anyplace, anytime. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 until i choose to focus on something else. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 all this with no trade minimums. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and only $8.95 a trade. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 open an account with a $50,000 deposit, tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and get 6 months co
it just takes time. >> seems time ran out for jcpenney ceo ron johnson. is the clock now ticking for the company's board? that's next. >> also, the banks have been leading this historic rally, as you know, but jeff cox says the banks could be heading for rough times and what could that do to the overall market? we'll talk about it, coming up on the "closing bell." tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 when i'm trading, i'm totally focused. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and the...
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Apr 2, 2013
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. >> this looks like details on ron johnson's salary. according to an scc filing, ron johnson received just $1.9 million as compensation in 2012. this compares to $53.3 million in 2011. $52 million of that was in stock. no named executives at jcpenney received a bonus in 2012 either according to the filing. maria? >> court, thank you so much. let's get to phil lebeau for the breaking news we've been waiting for on tesla. >> this is official. tesla is starting a lease to own program. and essentially it works like this. u.s. bank and wells fargo will put down a 10% deposit or fund a 10% deposit on a model s. and then that would bring the monthly payment to under $500 for those who are part of the program. after three years, tesla says if you don't like the vehicle or you want to move out of the vehicle, you can then resale it. and they're guaranteeing that the resale value, maria, will be at least the same as a mercedes model s. so that's the program that tesla is announcing. it will be interesting to see, maria, how much this improves sal
. >> this looks like details on ron johnson's salary. according to an scc filing, ron johnson received just $1.9 million as compensation in 2012. this compares to $53.3 million in 2011. $52 million of that was in stock. no named executives at jcpenney received a bonus in 2012 either according to the filing. maria? >> court, thank you so much. let's get to phil lebeau for the breaking news we've been waiting for on tesla. >> this is official. tesla is starting a lease to own...
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Apr 22, 2013
04/13
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and really the people of johnson & johnson. so if you remember, when we spoke a year ago, we talked about a couple priorities that we had in place. one was making sure that we got our over-the-counter brands back on the market. relaunched in the right way. we've made a lot of progress. in just this last quarter wu saw about 14% growth in over the counter grands. we're starting to get products like tylenol, children's cough and cold back on the market. we've seen strong performance. we expect that by the end of the year we'll probably have about 75% of them back on the market. very impressively, too, is our pharmaceutical sector. almost by any measure if you look at new products launched, we've had a tremendous success story. products like prostate cancer. thrombosis. products for hepatitis c, hiv. very impressively, not only have we been able to launch products successfully but new products we have coming out like for b cell lymphoma have been designated as breakthrough by the fda. >> i want to talk more about the pharma busine
and really the people of johnson & johnson. so if you remember, when we spoke a year ago, we talked about a couple priorities that we had in place. one was making sure that we got our over-the-counter brands back on the market. relaunched in the right way. we've made a lot of progress. in just this last quarter wu saw about 14% growth in over the counter grands. we're starting to get products like tylenol, children's cough and cold back on the market. we've seen strong performance. we...
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Apr 24, 2013
04/13
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johnson & johnson pays a dividend. it doesn't have to be a utility stock. it can be in various sectors. i think if you buy just energy and utilities, you've got all kinds of problems because of what's happening with commodity prices. but you buy dividend assets across a variety of sectors. i think that's the kind of growth that -- you can get growth out of those names, even if they're more defensive. >> every time i bring up the dividend that apple pays to people, they say, why are they using $100 billion plus on the balance sheet to pay dividends and buy back stock, and not coming up with the latest and greatest new innovation. just saying, you know what i mean? that's something that people constantly bring up. >> we've got to run, guys, thank you so much, and gal. we'll see you soon, jeannie, michael, and nathan, thank you so much. >>> we've got earnings alert right now on zynga. let's get to julia boorstin, the online social gamemaker's results. over to you, julia. >> adjusted earnings per share coming in at one penny. wall street analysts had been expec
johnson & johnson pays a dividend. it doesn't have to be a utility stock. it can be in various sectors. i think if you buy just energy and utilities, you've got all kinds of problems because of what's happening with commodity prices. but you buy dividend assets across a variety of sectors. i think that's the kind of growth that -- you can get growth out of those names, even if they're more defensive. >> every time i bring up the dividend that apple pays to people, they say, why are...
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Apr 25, 2013
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jcp, which has been beaten down in recent quarters and recently saw the departure, maria, of ceo ron johnson amid disappointing results. could be a big vote of confidence coming from a highly respected investor. we'll be getting more details as soon as possible. >> kate, thank you so much. the stock is moving for sure on this news. and we immediately saw the stock take off, as soon as that s.e.c. file crossed. let's get more now on amazon earnings, as we spoke with earlier, r.j. hadevi. he's with me again from morning star. also with me is aaron kessler from raymond james. aaron, let me kick this off with you since r.j. and i have been discussing this. what was your take on the amazon quarter? >> the numbers look fine. i would say revenues looked a little light, and same with the guidance for q2, although some of that may have been affect from japan, a big part of amazon. operating income was better, did about $448 million of operating income, above the high end of guidance at $350. a little slower revenue growth, but better operating income, so starting to see the margins improve for amazon
jcp, which has been beaten down in recent quarters and recently saw the departure, maria, of ceo ron johnson amid disappointing results. could be a big vote of confidence coming from a highly respected investor. we'll be getting more details as soon as possible. >> kate, thank you so much. the stock is moving for sure on this news. and we immediately saw the stock take off, as soon as that s.e.c. file crossed. let's get more now on amazon earnings, as we spoke with earlier, r.j. hadevi....
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Apr 8, 2013
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johnson & johnson struggling some today. analysts at jpmorgan not as excited. downgrade that stock to neutral. shares now look expensive. the company faces messy first quarter results according to the analysts. in contrast, lulu lemon enjoyed a pop. thornburg investment management, a mutual fund manager, reports a 10% stake. lulu lemon hit hard this year after pulling some yoga pants because they were too transparent. we'll end here on google giving up some ground today. stock broke below its 50-day moving average on friday. senior technical strategist at schafers tells me he's watching the 767 level. saying we violate that we could see more weakness near term. bill, back to you. >> i'm all confused on that lulu lemon thing. i thought transparency was a good thing these days. >> you're a guy, remember? >> that would be correct. may it ever be so. >>> what's the one thing that could ruin earnings season, you ask? mandy, do you know? after the break, we're going to find out what this hidden risk is and which companies are in the danger zone on that. >> my lips ar
johnson & johnson struggling some today. analysts at jpmorgan not as excited. downgrade that stock to neutral. shares now look expensive. the company faces messy first quarter results according to the analysts. in contrast, lulu lemon enjoyed a pop. thornburg investment management, a mutual fund manager, reports a 10% stake. lulu lemon hit hard this year after pulling some yoga pants because they were too transparent. we'll end here on google giving up some ground today. stock broke below...
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Apr 11, 2013
04/13
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procter and gamble, johnson and johnson, all-time hot by the way. clorox and kellogg. those are ripe tomatoes. but still has a little green at this point that you would want to leave on the vine? >> well, there is a way of overripe or willingness. one of the areas that i will leave alone right now to have some more jen is energy. it has not participated as well, but oil prices remain high. technology has been a little bit of a laggard. still some room to go. liz: so that leads me to my next question. you see opportunity in the market. now i look and say, what would be, what do you see as the catalyst that would force a correction? we have not seen yet. the sequestered did not exactly do it. what is it? what do you anticipate? try and let us know because people are wondering in they have not seen it and they're waiting. >> if i can get the actual fortune telling part of my business right, i'm opening a whole new business. the reality is is that when market price is extended you never know what will be the trigger and usually it is something we are not expecting. here ar
procter and gamble, johnson and johnson, all-time hot by the way. clorox and kellogg. those are ripe tomatoes. but still has a little green at this point that you would want to leave on the vine? >> well, there is a way of overripe or willingness. one of the areas that i will leave alone right now to have some more jen is energy. it has not participated as well, but oil prices remain high. technology has been a little bit of a laggard. still some room to go. liz: so that leads me to my...
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Apr 16, 2013
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flip it over to another component, johnson & johnson also at a 52 #-week high. that name is jumping a dollar-44 right now. you know if jcpenney's higher, you know it's a force situation here. look at jcpenney, jumping more than 5 #%, 6%, depending on what time of day you look at here after we learned that jcpenney is exploring ways to raise cash, trying to be creative here as they come up against a wall when it comes to cash, but they are active about it, shareholders like that right now. more op that in a moment, but, first, goldman sachs crushing it today reporting first quarter earnings. why is the stock down? the profits rose 5% while revenue showed an increase of 1%, but revenue from certain areas like fixed income, currency, commodity trading, down from 7%. we have analysts that are questioning the effective pending bank regulation on goldman so the stock pulls back by two and a quarter percent. keep it clear. they beat estimates. timely, yesterday's shocking loser a winner today. gold is rising right now, $7. as you saw early yerl today, it was jumping si
flip it over to another component, johnson & johnson also at a 52 #-week high. that name is jumping a dollar-44 right now. you know if jcpenney's higher, you know it's a force situation here. look at jcpenney, jumping more than 5 #%, 6%, depending on what time of day you look at here after we learned that jcpenney is exploring ways to raise cash, trying to be creative here as they come up against a wall when it comes to cash, but they are active about it, shareholders like that right now....
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Apr 17, 2013
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cheryl: ron johnson is available what do you say? >> to have an executive with experience in technology to see a little bit around corners not anybody right in the wing to make a great internal candidate but there should be a lot out there are. cheryl: let's talk about what you disagree about. one of the problems is the decline of pcs sales attributable to the tavern sales that are picking up. do you think those will be another issue with earnings from microsoft? >> gradually it will be an emerging issue but it speaks to the need for microsoft ago when a to present into a mobile platform. you cannot go skinny they have been dipping their toes. they have to go big to buy blackberry or shareholder both are competing for the third space in the united states will behind samsung and apple. they have to go big and mobil to enhance market share. cheryl: so microsoft should just buy blackberry? >> absolutely. the reason is microsoft is a huge. steve ballmer has done a great job with tools and servers but the enterprise space they own that bi
cheryl: ron johnson is available what do you say? >> to have an executive with experience in technology to see a little bit around corners not anybody right in the wing to make a great internal candidate but there should be a lot out there are. cheryl: let's talk about what you disagree about. one of the problems is the decline of pcs sales attributable to the tavern sales that are picking up. do you think those will be another issue with earnings from microsoft? >> gradually it...
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Apr 18, 2013
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in a severe cash crunch after a botched turnaround plan spearheaded by its recently ousted ceo, ron johnson, who was all excited to make all kinds of changes. and they were not working. reportedly taking a $100 million it if it had to liquidate the march towards acp every day inventory that it is already purchased. they don't want to do that. well, we are downright now. the s&p 500 is up about 8%. but as market sank this week, is the rally over? we going to raise we already have? the first quarter has gotten off to just a great start three years in a row. then kind of losing momentum. watch out. history could repeat. she is with rbc wealth management. she helps wealthy folks invest their money, and you're doing well. we can tell the people like what you're doing, so we need to hear from you. why does what happens in the first quarter of what you're seeing now the second quarter matter so much to the rest of the year? >> a couple of things. a persistent problem of the last couple of years, 2010, 11, at 12. we all tend to look in the economic data which was very robust, in the last part of th
in a severe cash crunch after a botched turnaround plan spearheaded by its recently ousted ceo, ron johnson, who was all excited to make all kinds of changes. and they were not working. reportedly taking a $100 million it if it had to liquidate the march towards acp every day inventory that it is already purchased. they don't want to do that. well, we are downright now. the s&p 500 is up about 8%. but as market sank this week, is the rally over? we going to raise we already have? the first...
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Apr 29, 2013
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ron johnson is out as ceo. george soros, now the fourth largest stakeholder in jcpenney. they are working on bringing this back. liz: here we are at the milken global conference. this is truly the gathering of the world most successful people in investment, in finance, also overall. many big thinkers here as well as world leaders. my next guest, we really wanted him on. he knows an awful lot. he will give us a window into how the truly wealthy invest right now. he is ubs global head of investment. he is joining now. more than 2 trillion. people want that window in the house. still hoarding the cash on the sidelines or calling you up more and more saying let's put it to work. >> more and more people talk about putting it to work. in the 130 billion that we invest discretion only, we are definitely moving more overweight inequities. you have to get comfortable with tina. there is no alternative. over the longer term, inflating asset prices and you have to participate to equities. our wealthier clients do not like the volatility of equities, but more and more they realize th
ron johnson is out as ceo. george soros, now the fourth largest stakeholder in jcpenney. they are working on bringing this back. liz: here we are at the milken global conference. this is truly the gathering of the world most successful people in investment, in finance, also overall. many big thinkers here as well as world leaders. my next guest, we really wanted him on. he knows an awful lot. he will give us a window into how the truly wealthy invest right now. he is ubs global head of...
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we'll see if some of the changes that ron johnson has been making will finally be lucrative from the company which has been a loser. david: another loser was hewlett-packard. the chairman is leaving. they worry about hewlett-packard without him. how is that doing now? >> hewlett-packard is the biggest loser on the weak for the dow jones industrial average. we're seeing if a change in the board there is a little more shareholder friendly.
we'll see if some of the changes that ron johnson has been making will finally be lucrative from the company which has been a loser. david: another loser was hewlett-packard. the chairman is leaving. they worry about hewlett-packard without him. how is that doing now? >> hewlett-packard is the biggest loser on the weak for the dow jones industrial average. we're seeing if a change in the board there is a little more shareholder friendly.
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let's get it together you know let's try and take it on let's go to brad johnson tyson slocum to lash out thank you all for joining thank you. coming up after the break there's not much difference between transportation the popular princeton's cartoon in transportation america today i will explain why and how we can change that in tonight's daily to a. potentially deadly blizzard taking aim for the northeast it's expected to hit stunning in a few hours from new york to maine we have team coverage of the storm. but what we're watching is the very heavy snow moving into boston proper earlier today it was very sticky you can see it start to become much more power. and there's still a lot of snow out here and a good place for snowball fight. to. it is kind of a pretty incredible day there and even record snowfall throughout what's it been like nobody's largely driving lessons from emergency vehicles are exceptions. international at the very heart of moscow. so the newscaster a.j. clemente had a rough day on the job a rough first day on the job in fact sunday at n.b.c. affiliate why are t.
let's get it together you know let's try and take it on let's go to brad johnson tyson slocum to lash out thank you all for joining thank you. coming up after the break there's not much difference between transportation the popular princeton's cartoon in transportation america today i will explain why and how we can change that in tonight's daily to a. potentially deadly blizzard taking aim for the northeast it's expected to hit stunning in a few hours from new york to maine we have team...
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let's get it together you know let's try and take it on let's go to brad johnson tyson slocum to lash out thank you all for joining thank you. and coming up after the break there's not much difference between transportation the popular flintstones cartoon in transportation america today i will explain why and how we can change that in tonight's daily to. let me let me i want we're going to let me ask you a question. here and this is what we have in the bank we have very nice though. believe you this was a bad thing never again hearing this story will be i going to talk about the e-mailing me. oh. you know sometimes you see a story and it seems so you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else you hear or see some other part of it and realize everything is. welcome to the big picture. the same story doesn't make it news. pieces. make you. think the worst you are going through. my house to the. radio guy for a minute from a. club because you've never seen anything like this. so the newscaster a.j. clemente had a rough day on the job a rough first day on the job and sund
let's get it together you know let's try and take it on let's go to brad johnson tyson slocum to lash out thank you all for joining thank you. and coming up after the break there's not much difference between transportation the popular flintstones cartoon in transportation america today i will explain why and how we can change that in tonight's daily to. let me let me i want we're going to let me ask you a question. here and this is what we have in the bank we have very nice though. believe you...
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Apr 2, 2013
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magic johnson was on the mound to throw out the ceremonial first pitch. when skipper don mattingly decided to yank him and instead replace him with dodgers legend and icon sandy koufax. but it was current dodger pitcher clayton kershaw who carried the day. kershaw hit his first career home run in the eighth inning giving the dodgers a lead and followed that up with a complete game shutout of the san francisco giants. guys no one has thrown a shutout and hit a homer on opening day since clevelands bob lemon back in 1953. that's it for bleacher report. it just shows you if you do a good job somewhere somewhere is watching opportunity knock like for coach enfield. >> oh, yeah. i'm waiting for my call for usc. thanks so much. bryce harper meanwhile on pace to hit 324 home runs this season. >> it is nice to hear the crack of a bat again, isn't it? >> it's the best thing ever. >> so are you a team leno or a team fallon member right now? there's a lot of buzz over who will win the battle to host the tonight show. the two late-night stars decided to set the recor
magic johnson was on the mound to throw out the ceremonial first pitch. when skipper don mattingly decided to yank him and instead replace him with dodgers legend and icon sandy koufax. but it was current dodger pitcher clayton kershaw who carried the day. kershaw hit his first career home run in the eighth inning giving the dodgers a lead and followed that up with a complete game shutout of the san francisco giants. guys no one has thrown a shutout and hit a homer on opening day since...
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Apr 26, 2013
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a lot of people try to replicate magic johnson. i do want to add, the national baseball association of all the leagues does the best job. rory sparrow, former nba player is really much at the forefront of educating the nba. they do magnificent job and they have a good sound program. so they're doing a good job. liz: ed, steve, thank you very much. it is good information. for everybody, david, people come into money or get a raise, you shouldn't squander it. david: magic johnson is the key. part owner of the l.a. dodgers. that guy done it right. >>> despite one cruise ship disaster after another the industry seems to do fine just thank you. how do they keep filling their ships? we're heading down to the port of miami next for the answer. thank you orville and wilbur... ...amelia... neil and buzz: for teaching us that you can't create the future... by clinging to the past. and with that: you're history. instead of looking behind... delta is looking beyond. 80 thousand of us investg billions... in everything from the best experiences
a lot of people try to replicate magic johnson. i do want to add, the national baseball association of all the leagues does the best job. rory sparrow, former nba player is really much at the forefront of educating the nba. they do magnificent job and they have a good sound program. so they're doing a good job. liz: ed, steve, thank you very much. it is good information. for everybody, david, people come into money or get a raise, you shouldn't squander it. david: magic johnson is the key. part...
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Apr 30, 2013
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hallway, i keep hearing i have to tweet this picture, listen i was tweeting a picture of me and magic johnson when i saw him in the hallway here. you are an twitter. aren't you angling to get the company to launch an ipo so you can get your investment back? are you pushing for that? >> i think it is really up to management to make those decisions. i think that we are very patient investors. i think there is the, has to be a right time for the company to go public. in fact our investment strategy was totally based on giving enough liquidity to private investors in big companies, so that the ipo can actually be postponed. so, i think, this is very relevant for some significant companies to basically not go public too early and, --. liz: been a few years, hasn't it, with twitter? >> i think it was a couple of years. liz: yeah. been a couple. david, you've got some questions. david: i do, and yuri, good to talk to you again my friend. facebook, let's talk about, dozens if not hundreds of people probably come to you in the course of a year with ideas for you to invest in. i'm just wondering what m
hallway, i keep hearing i have to tweet this picture, listen i was tweeting a picture of me and magic johnson when i saw him in the hallway here. you are an twitter. aren't you angling to get the company to launch an ipo so you can get your investment back? are you pushing for that? >> i think it is really up to management to make those decisions. i think that we are very patient investors. i think there is the, has to be a right time for the company to go public. in fact our investment...
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the company fires former apple guru, ron johnson, the ceo. one analyst says this 111-year-old retailer is very close to heading for bankruptcy. i asked two of our people in the last hour on the subject, do they agree. they said yes, bankruptcy. adam shapiro with the details breaking next. ashley: we want you to know, would like to know what you think. the irs, get this, may now use social media to catch suspected tags cheats. is social media fair game? that is the question. log on to facebook.co facebook.com/afterthebell. we'll read some of your answers if they're readable, later this hour. ♪ . [ male announcer ] at his current pace, bob will retire when he's 153, which would be fine if bob were a vampire. but he's not. ♪ he's an architect with two kids and a mortgage. luckily, he found someone who gave him a fresh perspective on hisortfolio. and with some planning and effort, hopefully bob can retire at a more appropriate age. it's not rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. it's just common sense. all stations come o
the company fires former apple guru, ron johnson, the ceo. one analyst says this 111-year-old retailer is very close to heading for bankruptcy. i asked two of our people in the last hour on the subject, do they agree. they said yes, bankruptcy. adam shapiro with the details breaking next. ashley: we want you to know, would like to know what you think. the irs, get this, may now use social media to catch suspected tags cheats. is social media fair game? that is the question. log on to...
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Apr 1, 2013
04/13
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take a closer look, to do that is peter johnson, jr. >> this is the shame of america. there are no justice for these veterans with disabilities. now the average wait time is 273 days. there has been a 2,000% increase in the number of vied rans with disabilities waiting more than a year to get their disability benefits. these are our wounded warriors. these are our people who have been wounded, lost their arms and legs, suffering posttraumatic stress disorder and do you know who pays those bills when they're waiting for more than a year, gretchen? not you and me, as the taxpayers. but our veterans themselves. our disabled veterans. so under george w. bush, they have cut the waiting time by about a third. president obama, as senator obama in 2008 made this tremendous promise that he was going to cure this, that he was going to help our veterans and now they're laying at home sick, sore, lame, disabled and paying out of their own pocket. >> gretchen: what's the problem? >> the problem is that the federal government spent about a half billion dollars on the computer system
take a closer look, to do that is peter johnson, jr. >> this is the shame of america. there are no justice for these veterans with disabilities. now the average wait time is 273 days. there has been a 2,000% increase in the number of vied rans with disabilities waiting more than a year to get their disability benefits. these are our wounded warriors. these are our people who have been wounded, lost their arms and legs, suffering posttraumatic stress disorder and do you know who pays those...
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Apr 8, 2013
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here now is peter johnson, jr. we were shocked when many -- many people were, maybe not you, when the people had all this emotion when ronald reagan passed away, even though it was expected. the funeral was packed. the perspective was unbelievable i. think it's going to be the same with her. >> i agree. this truly is the end of the reagan-thatcher era. margaret thatcher was voted one of the most influential and important people of the 20th century by time magazine. she was the first woman prime minister of great britain. she was the longest-serving prime minister since the 19th century. she brought a moral absolutism and a sense of nationalism and a sense of the independence of business and persons as opposed to government forces that was unique and that was transformative in england and in america during ronald reagan's period. she suffered an ira assassination attempt that she lived through. on that same day, she went on to give the very speech that she was supposed to give. so in the mold of winston churchill an
here now is peter johnson, jr. we were shocked when many -- many people were, maybe not you, when the people had all this emotion when ronald reagan passed away, even though it was expected. the funeral was packed. the perspective was unbelievable i. think it's going to be the same with her. >> i agree. this truly is the end of the reagan-thatcher era. margaret thatcher was voted one of the most influential and important people of the 20th century by time magazine. she was the first woman...
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Apr 10, 2013
04/13
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>> i've commented that a lot of steady stocks seemed stressed, but johnson & johnson doesn't. i think it's still a safe bet if. if you're nervous, put on a 75, 85 collar to protect your game. >> this is for karen. thoughts on kors. >> just too high. for me, it's macy's. >> grasso, looking to start a position in google. at what level would it be a good entry point? >> i'm trying to do the same thing. it traded down to 770. i'd rather buy it on momentum above 795 or wait till after the bank's report because that will be the test on the market. >> it was interesting to hear them outline google as sort of eating away at that space in terms of having a lock on chrome as well as android. people that are buying laptops are buying the chromebook. everyone wants a tablet, everyone wants a smart phone. but if you're buying a laptop, you're buying the chromebook, it's light and the price point works dramatically better. they're going to own that market, don't sell googem short just yet. >> trading lower on the back of the idcpc data. so look at names like microsoft and intel. those are n
>> i've commented that a lot of steady stocks seemed stressed, but johnson & johnson doesn't. i think it's still a safe bet if. if you're nervous, put on a 75, 85 collar to protect your game. >> this is for karen. thoughts on kors. >> just too high. for me, it's macy's. >> grasso, looking to start a position in google. at what level would it be a good entry point? >> i'm trying to do the same thing. it traded down to 770. i'd rather buy it on momentum above 795...
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Apr 2, 2013
04/13
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obviously a big pay cut in terms of his pay package for ron johnson. $1.9 million in 2012 versus 53.3. is this one you can invest in? can you see the forest for the trees in the jcpenney tunnel? >> one of this things you want to see is him gone. >> or take a dollar. you earned $53 million the year before. >> steve jobs said to him point-blank right out of the box, why you doing this? at the end of the day, impression is as impression does. his job security is in trouble, and now his compensation is evidently in trouble. >> the problem you have with jcpenney, even if everything worked, the stores worked, everything is fantastic, it might be too late for the company. >> if he said i'm going to take a dollar in pay, would you feel a little bit better about the story? >> no. it sounds like a dollar more than he thinks he zirvegs a dollar not well spent. all right. coming up next on "fast," how to play like the big boys. look at where the world's top activist investors may be taking stakes, next. and why it may be the end of an era for gold. back right after this. we went out and asked peo
obviously a big pay cut in terms of his pay package for ron johnson. $1.9 million in 2012 versus 53.3. is this one you can invest in? can you see the forest for the trees in the jcpenney tunnel? >> one of this things you want to see is him gone. >> or take a dollar. you earned $53 million the year before. >> steve jobs said to him point-blank right out of the box, why you doing this? at the end of the day, impression is as impression does. his job security is in trouble, and...
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Apr 24, 2013
04/13
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and watch out johnson and johnson. what could be the next big company in men's high general? we're back right after this. >> welcome back to fast money. we are live at the nasdaq market. more than 35,000 people in the united states are living with huntington's disease and an estimated 75,000 carry the gene. there is currently no cure for huntington's disease and focuses on treating symptoms which do worsen over time. doctor stanley is chairman and ceo at isis pharmaceuticals. thanks for joining us. >> talk to us in layman's terms, the technology. >> it's now a new platform for drug discovery. >> so at what stage would someone take this drug after they have exhibited symptoms? >> this is a drug that is still being researched. the first place it would be used is patients with symptoms. you would not want to use it for people who did not have symptoms. over time, the goal would be to have the drug used earlier because if you have the gene, you're going to get the disease. and obviously the deterioration in the brain starts long before you begin to see the signs and symptoms of t
and watch out johnson and johnson. what could be the next big company in men's high general? we're back right after this. >> welcome back to fast money. we are live at the nasdaq market. more than 35,000 people in the united states are living with huntington's disease and an estimated 75,000 carry the gene. there is currently no cure for huntington's disease and focuses on treating symptoms which do worsen over time. doctor stanley is chairman and ceo at isis pharmaceuticals. thanks for...
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Apr 29, 2013
04/13
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. >> craig johnson of piper jaffray. are you also a skeptic, guy adami, of the technology sector? >> the technology sector? a little bit. i thought it was interesting. he mentioned ford, and i don't see that in the charts but what i do see that's interesting, the autos, and we talked about it a week and a half two, weeks ago-s toyota motors, who i think made another 52-week high today. if you believe the weakness in the general is going to continue, which sort of do believe, i do think the best way to play it is with tm. >> pops and drops. the big movers of the session. we kick it off way pop for deere, up 4%. tim. >> the other part of this rally over the last couple of days has been materials pl deere more or less has caught a dip where caterpillar sees -- 13% off its lows, recent lows. i think you play this to 95 and i think you pull. >> drop for las vegas sands down 1%, pete. >> a lot of this coming off the change of the -- a lot of concerns about that. but the stock rallied off that and you look at the may 60 calls. extremely active today. i actually think this is a buying opp
. >> craig johnson of piper jaffray. are you also a skeptic, guy adami, of the technology sector? >> the technology sector? a little bit. i thought it was interesting. he mentioned ford, and i don't see that in the charts but what i do see that's interesting, the autos, and we talked about it a week and a half two, weeks ago-s toyota motors, who i think made another 52-week high today. if you believe the weakness in the general is going to continue, which sort of do believe, i do...
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Apr 3, 2013
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it is pivotal for ron johnson here. this has to work for him. this represents about 12% of the business, home used to represent about 20% of the business years back. so there's a huge opportunity here. and they're bringing in brands like michael grays, like jonathan adler, but martha stewart, that's a big question mark. there's an opportunity, but the question is, they've got to get the traffic back to let the people know that the home is transformed and the traffic's down 17%. >> now, the problem is they have to get the traffic back in every single category, not just home goods. and for home goods, that's where the lunch has absolutely been eaten. if you take a look at home goods the t.j. max brand, their sales were up 18% last year. does look like they're losing share to some of these other competitors. william-sonoma came out with numbers there. >> absolutely. and if you look at the home business, it was up 8%, 10% last year. you're seeing killer numbers from all the retailers that you just mentioned. the there's no excuse here. they've got t
it is pivotal for ron johnson here. this has to work for him. this represents about 12% of the business, home used to represent about 20% of the business years back. so there's a huge opportunity here. and they're bringing in brands like michael grays, like jonathan adler, but martha stewart, that's a big question mark. there's an opportunity, but the question is, they've got to get the traffic back to let the people know that the home is transformed and the traffic's down 17%. >> now,...
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Apr 4, 2013
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johnson's job even more tenuous? >> i have to think so. >> yeah. >> he spent money buying their stock and positioning them. it seems tenuous already, actually. >> pops and drops, big movers of the session. we kick it off as a pop for macy's, up 2%, karen. >> on the flip side. what an outstanding company this is. i don't know why it was up necessarily today. but even here not expensive. >> terra data down 7%. >> morgan stanley took it off their best ideas list. awful now for a while. traded 17 times normal value. they're no one-day event. but for the first time in a while it might be interesting in the next couple days. drop in pioneer natural resource. >> both getting cracked today. it's the 130th most shorted stock in the s&p 500. and those shorts were feasting on it today, down like you say about 3%. >> pop here for valero, up 2%. grasso? >> panda. just kidding. a bunch of headwinds. ethanol credits, sulfur parts per million, the wti brent spread has been coming in. i sold the name. i think it's out of gas right no
johnson's job even more tenuous? >> i have to think so. >> yeah. >> he spent money buying their stock and positioning them. it seems tenuous already, actually. >> pops and drops, big movers of the session. we kick it off as a pop for macy's, up 2%, karen. >> on the flip side. what an outstanding company this is. i don't know why it was up necessarily today. but even here not expensive. >> terra data down 7%. >> morgan stanley took it off their best...
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Apr 19, 2013
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joining us on the phone is larry johnson from berg associates. he served in the cia in the office of counterterrorism at the u.s. department. talk about the possibility of a chechen connection. does that ring true to you and, if so, give me your thoughts on how the united states should pursue that connection to the point that jeff cutmore brought up with the connection to the russians? >> i don't think it's even suspected. i think it is clear that there's a chechen connection. do you mean that the separatist groups and activists there, i would say no. i would say the exact opposite of that. i suspect these two are more along the lines of a major nidal hasan who carried out the attacks through the internet and it's clear with the older brother, tamerlan traveling to russia, i suspect it was he went down into his -- where he has relatives and received training. he was gone for six months last year. we saw that bombing on monday, i would call it tactically sophisticated, strategically stupid. what i mean by that, it shows that they had done proper r
joining us on the phone is larry johnson from berg associates. he served in the cia in the office of counterterrorism at the u.s. department. talk about the possibility of a chechen connection. does that ring true to you and, if so, give me your thoughts on how the united states should pursue that connection to the point that jeff cutmore brought up with the connection to the russians? >> i don't think it's even suspected. i think it is clear that there's a chechen connection. do you mean...
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Apr 23, 2013
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no guidance, lowering from companies like johnson controls, i will fois tool, ingersoll rand. you have industrials participating. are you a believer or not? >> it's a glass half full market for sure. it will continue that way. the negative side isn't being focused on. let's not forget g.e. in the core businesses were down mid double digits in the teens. look at packard, they missed. arch cole missed. there is plenty to go around. the german economic numbers showing recession. china pulling back. that's not where it is. where it is now is people believe that dragee will come out and ease as opposed to to the balance heat h rinking and that will cure everything. it may. you have to go with it but be extremely careful about the sector you're in. i like financials. with spanish and italian yields coming down, spanish banks shorted, i think financials will continue. you've got to be in defensive stocks, not commodities or in the deep cyclicals this my view. >> anthony, we mentioned the great view on the hedge fund community, how the big money is thinking about the market. how do yo
no guidance, lowering from companies like johnson controls, i will fois tool, ingersoll rand. you have industrials participating. are you a believer or not? >> it's a glass half full market for sure. it will continue that way. the negative side isn't being focused on. let's not forget g.e. in the core businesses were down mid double digits in the teens. look at packard, they missed. arch cole missed. there is plenty to go around. the german economic numbers showing recession. china...